Vol. 160 / No. 1384
Vol. 160 / No. 1384
The last few years have seen a remarkable upsurge in exhibitions and scholarly studies on Eugène Delacroix. In 2013–14, Delacroix and the Matter of Finish was shown at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art and the Birmingham Museum of Art, Alabama, and in 2015–16 Delacroix and the Rise of Modern Art was mounted by the Minneapolis Institute of Art and the National Gallery, London.1 Both exhibitions had a limited focus and, of course, a truly comprehensive survey of the whole of Delacroix’s career is only possible under the aegis of the Louvre. Its current offering, Delacroix (1798–1863),2 is the first major retrospective survey dedicated to the artist since the one organised by Maurice Sérullaz, also at the Louvre, in 1963.3
The rich variety of subject-matter and scale of Delacroix’s
works would be a challenge for any curator, and Sébastian Allard and Côme Fabre
are to be congratulated on the success of their arrangements in the Hall Napoléon.
Certain pragmatic decisions have had to be made and three large paintings are
not incorporated within the main show: The Entry of the crusaders into
Constantinople (1840; cat. no.95) and the Death of Sardanapalus (1827; no.45)
remain in the Salle Mollien of the first floor of the Denon pavilion. There
they are accompanied by Christ in the garden of Olives (1826–27; no.115),
recently restored and looking splendid, which has been temporarily rescued from
being ‘skied’ in the Stygian gloom above the entrance to the chapel of
Notre-Dame-des-Sept- Douleurs at St Paul-St Louis in the Marais. The
restoration has revealed the subtle radiance of Christ’s head, and the trio of
winsome yet poignant angels, the sleeping disciples and the Pharisees and Roman
soldiers led by Judas are now far more legible.
The complete range of the output of this often contradictory
and always elusive artist is presented in a mostly chronological manner. The
show opens in familiar territory, with five large-scale Salon works from
1821–30: the Barque of Dante (no.6), Scenes from the massacres at Chios
(no.12), Greece on the ruins of Missolonghi (no.71), the Battle of Nancy
(no.49) and 28th July. Liberty leading the people (no.72) hang together in the
first main room. Subsequent sections deal with the artist’s increasing
involvement with state commissions for both independent works and official buildings
and the visual harvest from his privileged trip to Morocco in 1832 (1833–54),
and the final phase (1855–63), marked by his success at the Exposition
Universelle, his acceptance as an Academician and his preoccupation with memory
in smallscale works, often made to satisfy the demands of the art market.
Of the large-scale easel paintings, the only really notable
absentees are the Battle of Taillebourg at Versailles, the Justice of Trajan at
Rouen and the Sultan of Morocco in Toulouse. While an early sketch for the last
is exhibited (no.73) –it includes the Comte de Mornay, who is absent in the
final work — some explanation of the sketch’s status would have been welcome,
as well as an illustration of the finished canvas.
Within this framework there are numerous suggestive
groupings, mainly concerned with memory, the passage of time and the artist’s complicated
creative process. Delacroix’s obsessive studies on the subject of Hamlet are
revealed in a sequence of paintings, prints and sketches beginning as early as
1828. Although the ‘definitive’ version is probably that of 1839, where the pensive
young Prince might be seen as a veiled self-portrait (no.143; Fig.14), Delacroix
continued to return to the theme and a late sketch of 1859 shows Hamlet and
Horatio accompanied by a torch-lit burial procession (no.145).
The cross-fertilisation between the artist’s decorative
schemes and Salon works is strikingly demonstrated in St Sebastian from St
Michel, Nantua (no.96). Purchased after the 1837 Salon, the almost life-size
figure of the punctured saint is attended by the Holy Women, who are Christian versions
of the allegorical females found on both the wall and ceiling panels of the
Salle du Trône in the Palais Bourbon. Thoughtfully chosen sections on
Delacroix’s ravishing flower and animal paintings and his studies of landscape
also contribute to the comprehensive nature of the show. Works that seldom seem
to travel are also included, notably the psychologically complex Cleopatra and
the peasant (1838; Ackland Art Museum, Chapel Hill; no.104), in which the
artist’s recent experience of North Africa enabled the characterisation of the
Egyptian queen and her slave as richly clothed and bejewelled Orientals.
Smaller sections deal with Delacroix as a printmaker.
Vitrines contain some of his sketchbooks, from both Paris and the Morocco trip,
and the journals. The post-1847 journals are physically far more substantial
than the earlier journal and are written in commercially produced, oblong
household account books. It is fascinating to see how Delacroix pasted in
clippings from books and newspapers – two excerpts from the Moniteur universel
accompany the entries for 8th–9th January 1856 – as well as inserting pressed
flowers from his Rue Furstenberg garden – a lobelia for 8th August 1859.
The curatorial principles behind the presentation of the
show are clearly to let the works speak for themselves and to promote Delacroix
as the supreme colourist, the painter of thoughts and ideas and the unparalleled
interpreter of literature. Although this strategy has much to recommend it, it
does seem a somewhat modest aim when dealing with an increasingly sophisticated
and visually aware public. In one way or another many aspects of French daily
life are still affected by the geo-political decisions made during Delacroix’s
lifetime and, perhaps, with his support. Issues such as gender, race,
civilisation and barbarism, Orientalism and the painter’s much disputed place in
the French colonial project barely merit a mention in the captions for
individual exhibits or in the explanatory texts that introduce each section.
The Women of Algiers in their apartment (no.89; Fig.15), one of the most
argued-over paintings in the whole of Delacroix’s oeuvre is presented with no
suggestions as to why it has provoked such heated debate. Another opportunity
for interrogating Delacroix’s enduring legacy came with 28th July. Liberty
leading the people. Little attention is given to the picture’s political
dimensions and its evolution into a national icon (not to mention its usage to
promote the opening of the Louvre’s satellite at Lens in 2012). May 2018 also
marked the fiftieth anniversary of the student uprising in Paris, when many improvised
images of Liberty were produced and Caroline de Bendern posed for Jean-Pierre
Rey’s iconic photograph La Marianne de Mai 68. Locating Liberty within this
rich milieu might have further enriched the visitor’s experience.
Undoubtedly the show celebrates, confirms and consolidates
Delacroix’s undisputed status as the major figure in French painting in the
first half of the nineteenth century. For many people Delacroix has been an
artist more admired than liked, but this very fine exhibition should place him
on a par, at least in popular terms, with his more approachable and less
visually demanding nineteenth-century successors. From the Louvre, the exhibition
moves to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (17th September–6th January
2019). With so many of Delacroix’s key paintings too fragile to travel, a
somewhat different emphasis and narrative will be necessary, but the artist’s
multifaceted brilliance will undoubtedly ensure the visitor an equally stunning
visual feast.
The Louvre exhibition could only touch on Delacroix’s
considerable career as a decorative painter of religious and civic buildings
and, of course, direct the visitor to his Apollo slays python (1850–51) three
floors above. But an almost concurrent exhibition at the nearby Musée Delacroix
acts as an introduction to and commentary on the artist’s newly restored cycle
of works for his last decorative cycle at the church of St Sulpice, Paris,
(completed 1861).4 The image of the ‘struggle’ of the painterly process had
been introduced by the artist himself right at the start of his career and at
St Sulpice he wrote of the problems encountered when painting at the church.
These ‘struggles’ concerned not only the accomplishment of satisfying compositional
solutions for the three scenes – St Michael defeats the Devil; Heliodorus
driven from the Temple and Jacob wrestling with the Angel (Fig.16) – but also
conquering the physical challenge of painting directly onto the two side walls
(Jacob and Heliodorus) in the demanding oil and wax medium Delacroix preferred
to use for the decoration of walls.
The Musée Delacroix exhibition provides a very full
examination of Delacroix’s possible sources and also, very astutely, associates
the St Sulpice works with his late-inlife concern regarding his place in posterity
and with measuring himself against the great masters of the past – in this
instance Raphael, Titian and Rubens. The subsequent influence of the St Sulpice
murals on Gauguin, Maurice Denis and Chagall is also examined. The exhibition
serves as an excellent prelude to visiting the church itself, ten minutes’ walk
away. Delacroix was never an accomplished technician in either oil or in the
oil and wax medium, and his St Sulpice murals have needed some form of intervention
from conservators every thirty to forty years. This latest campaign, under the
leadership of Alina Mostkalil Detalle, is the most comprehensive yet undertaken
and has yielded such spectacular results that one can almost speak of a rebirth
of the cycle. The revelation of the flochetage (flossing) is now especially apparent
in the lower portion of Heliodorus, the bubbling spring in the foreground of
Jacob has become wholly legible and the multi-coloured armour of St Michael is
far more distinct. Although sometimes characterised as Delacroix’s ‘final testament’,
he did hope to work on other schemes with his assistant Pierre Andrieu. Fate
then intervened, but now more than ever, the St Sulpice murals stand
indisputably as some of the most powerful biblical scenes from the nineteenth
century.
1 The catalogue to the former exhibition was reviewed by Stephen Duffy in this Magazine, 157 (2015), p.277; the latter exhibition was reviewed by the present writer in this Magazine, 158 (2016), pp.376–78.
2 Catalogue: Delacroix (1798–1863). By Sébastien Allard and Côme Fabre. 480 pp. incl. 250 ills. (Hazan and Editions du Musée du Louvre, Paris, 2018), €45. ISBN 978–2–7541–1443–1.
3 See L. Johnson: ‘The Delacroix centenary in France – 1’, THE BURLINGTON MAGAZINE 105 (1963), pp.294, 297–303 and 305; and idem: ‘The Delacroix centenary in France – 2’, THE BURLINGTON MAGAZINE 106 (1965), pp.259–65, 267 and 271.
4 Catalogue: Une lutte moderne, de Delacroix à nos jours. Edited by Dominique de Font- Réaulx and Marie Monfort, with essays by Stéphane Guégan, Thierry Laugier, Alina Moskalik-Detalle, Paul Perrin and Valérie Sueur. 192 pp. incl. 220 col. ills. (Le
passage and Musée du Louvre, Paris,
2018), €28. ISBN 978–2–84742–384–6.